http://www.energyefficiencynews.comAfion Media Ltd UK’s climate change committee unveils tough emissions targets <p>In just over a decade, the UK should reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by at least 21% compared with 2005 levels, according to new recommendation from the UK&rsquo;s <a rel="external" href="http://www.theccc.org.uk">Committee on Climate Change</a>.</p> <p>The recommendation is just one of a number made in the Committee&rsquo;s first report, Building a Low-Carbon Economy &ndash; The UK&rsquo;s Contribution to Tackling Climate Change, launched today by chair Lord Adair Turner.</p> <p>The Committee was set up in 2007 by Prime Minister Gordon Brown to advise the government on climate change. Its recommendation to increase the UK&rsquo;s emissions target from a 60% cut to an 80% cut by 2050 has already been adopted by the government&rsquo;s Climate Change Bill.</p> <p>To achieve the UK&rsquo;s target of an 80% reduction in emissions by 2050 over 1990 levels, the Committee says the country has to focus on decarbonising electricity supply, which currently accounts for around 25% of emissions.</p> <p>&ldquo;Once we decarbonise electricity production, we can then apply electricity to new activities &ndash; for instance to road transport and to the heating of buildings,&rdquo; says Turner.</p> <p>The UK&rsquo;s budget for emissions cuts should depend on whether or not a global deal is reached in Copenhagen in 2009, says the report.</p> <p>If a global deal to cut emissions is reached next year, the UK should pledge to reduce emissions by 42% compared with 1990 levels by 2020 (equivalent to a 31% cut relative to 2005); regardless, the UK should unilaterally commit to a cut of 34% compared with 1990 levels by 2020 (equivalent to 21% relative to 2005).</p> <p>However, the unilateral target of a 34% cut in emissions falls short of what environmental group <a rel="external" href="http://www.foe.co.uk">Friends of the Earth</a> was hoping for &ndash; unless international agreement is achieved.</p> <p>&ldquo;The committee should call for all UK greenhouse gas emissions to fall by 40% by 2020 &ndash; this is the size of reduction that experts say is required to avoid a climate disaster,&rdquo; says executive director, Andy Atkins.</p> <p>Environmental groups will also be sorely disappointed at the recommendation to exclude &ndash; at least initially &ndash; aviation and shipping from the targets.</p> <p>Adair defended the Committee&rsquo;s position, saying:<br /> &ldquo;It [is] difficult to include international aviation in the UK national budget without creating complex reconciliation problems which will impede rather than aid clear analysis of trends.&rdquo;</p> <p>There would also be major problems in trying to establish a UK- or Europe-only approach to shipping, he adds. A global deal is the only way forward, the report concludes.</p> <p>The recommendations in detail:</p> <ul> <li>Reduce emissions from electricity generation 40% compared with 1990 levels by 2020. This would entail 30% of the country&rsquo;s electricity from renewables &ndash; mainly wind, although the reduction could still be made with a lower proportion of renewables and a nuclear component;</li> <li>New coal-fired power plants should only be built if they can be retrofitted with carbon capture and storage systems by the early 2020s;</li> <li>Cut emissions from transport sector through the adoption of more efficient cars &ndash; and implementing the proposed EU target of 100 g per km for new cars by 2020.</li> </ul> <p>According to the report, these changes should cost less than 1% of GDP by 2020. Estimates by the Committee put the figure at something in the region of 0.3-0.8%.</p> <p>However, there will also be a cost for consumers. Without offsetting the costs of decarbonising energy supply, the Committe estimates the moving to a low carbon economy will push an additional 1.7 million into fuel poverty.</p> <p>Energy efficiency measures such as better home insulation could help around 400,000 but the rest would have to be assisted through social tariffs and other measures.</p> <p>The Government will give in-depth consideration to the new recommendations, says Ed Miliband, Secretary of State at the Department of Energy and Climate Change.</p> <p>&ldquo;Plotting a course to a low carbon future here in the UK is vital if we are to reach our domestic goals and reach an international agreement. I am pleased to say that from 2009, carbon budgets will take their place alongside financial budgets and become pivotal to policy decisions within the UK.&rdquo;</p> <p>For further information:<br /> <a rel="external" href="http://www.theccc.org.uk">www.theccc.org.uk</a><br /> <a rel="external" href="http://www.foe.co.uk">www.foe.co.uk</a></p> http://www.energyefficiencynews.com/power-generation/i/1647/ 2008-12-01T00:00:00-00:00 UK policy, carbon emissions targets, energy efficiency, transport, power generation, carbon capture and storage, renewables, Committee on Climate Change, Friends of the Earth